Iceland review - 2014, Side 24

Iceland review - 2014, Side 24
22 ICELAND REVIEW There’s an air of grandeur about the large, white house that proudly stands at 10 Grundarstígur amidst the colorful corrugated iron houses of Þingholt, 101 Reykjavík. After all, this is no ordinary house. It was commissioned in 1915 by Iceland’s beloved statesman and poet Hannes Hafstein (1861-1922) who lived there with his family until his dying day. The house has now been renovated and turned into a flourishing cultural center, restaurant and café, attracting guests from every corner of the world. “The idea is to invite the public to enjoy its atmosphere and fall into its rhythm, stepping into a place where the past connects with the present,” says the owner and founder of Hannesarholt, Ragnheiður Jóna Jónsdóttir. “Many people who come here don’t pay much attention to Hannes—the house makes them remember their grandmother or their old aunt, leading them back to their own personal roots.” By ÁSta andréSdóttir PHOTOS By PÁll StefÁnSSon ANd ÁSlaug Snorradóttir Hannesarholt is a non-profit organization, midway between a home and an institute; a meeting point for the public and for scholars. “It is a place for preserving our cultural history; remembering where we came from and where we are going. Retrieving our cultural memory,” she explains over a cappuc- cino and delicious apple pie, baked on the premises. “That way, we will be better equipped to face the future. Icelanders sprinted from the middle ages to modernity in the short span of a hundred years. Running fast, you forget to look around you, and something might fall from your pockets along the way. The way the nation managed to rise from poverty and ignorance is truly admirable but Hannesarholt is about slow- ing down. We have reached modernity; we don’t need to run anymore. Now it’s important to slow down and look back to the people who built the society in which we live, remember things that we had forgotten about.” Named after its original owner, the poet and first Icelandic Minister of State Hannes Hafstein, Hannesarholt is a new cultural center in one of Reykjavík’s most striking and historic houses. AN EMBRACE FROM THE PAST
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Iceland review

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